May 2017
A May of Many Marvels
Big Doings This Weekend at our Performathon!
Come
see amazing local talent and
help us break a
Guinness Book of World Record
Here's the current lineup
Saturday
10:30am Tom Andersen Sings
11:00am Hop-O-Nose
Dancers & Singers
12:00pm Michael DeBenedictus at
the Piano
12:25pm Cathy Schuyler, Dramatic
Soprano
12:45pm Alexa Powell Sings
1:30pm Lynn
Kearney Sings
1:45pm Garfield Moore, Alison Davy,
Michael DeBenedictus – Handel & Sondheim
2:15pm
Natalie Parker Sings and Plays Guitar
2:45pm Jeff
Mill Sings
3:00pm Steven Patterson Reads J.D.
Salinger #1
3:25pm Alexa Powell Sings with Uke
3:30pm Magpie Bookstore Ukulele Camp
4:00pm
Ramblin’ Jug Stompers
4:30pm Adam Hoyt Reads
Original Poetry
5:05pm Thomas Holland,
Singer/Songwriter
6:30pm Edward Donahue Band
7:00pm Matt Bua, Harry Matthews, Nameless Quivers
Band
7:30pm Lex Grey, Vic Deyglio, Acoustic Set
8:30pm Vincent, Rapper
Sunday
10:30am
MaryEllen Gallagher Dances
11:15am Sage Commesso,
Sings and Plays
11:30am Marie Greco, Poems about
9/11—30 minutes
12:30pm Vic Deyglio Reads Nixon’s
Resignation Speech
12:40pm Electronic music
1:00pm Community Event TBA. Come join in
2:45pm
Molly Osswald on the Sax
3:00pm Ron Stetkewicz,
Singer/Songwriter
4:00pm Sean Doolan, Magician
4:45pm Foggy Otis Solo
5:05pm Thomas Holland,
Singer/Songwriter
6:00pm Phillip Levine,
Approximate Poet Falls in Love and Can’t Get Up
7:30pm Terri Mateer (Not for children under 16)
8:00pm Joe Finkler, Mime
8:10pm Jane Toby, Steven
Patterson, Poetry
8:30pm Robert Tomlinson, Poetry
9:00pm Steven Patterson reads J.D. Salinger #2
May 5-7: ChipandGus
May 13: What You
Don't Know About Women
May 21:
Coney Island
May 27-28:
Performathon
ChipandGus

Written and
performed by John Ahlin and Christopher Patrick
Mullen
Friday May 5 and Saturday May 6 at 7:30pm
Sunday May 7 at 2:00pm
General Admission
$20, $10 for Students
Advance tickets
HERE or by calling 1-800-838-3006
Tickets can also be
purchased prior to each performance on a space
available basis.
WHAT YOU DON’T KNOW ABOUT WOMEN

Lynn Kearney and Sonja Stuart
Musical Director:
Dan Furman
Aid & Affection: Rosemary Quinn
Help & Direction: Eric Michael Gillett
Loyalty,
Love & Forsooth: John Donahoe
One Night Only!
Saturday May 13, 2017 at 7:30pm
$20, $10 for
patrons age 21 and under
Advance
reservations
HERE or by calling 800-838-3006.
Tickets also go on
sale at the door 30-minutes prior to the performance
(pending availability)
And Then
Sunday, May 21 @ 2:00
pm
A reading of the new musical
Coney Island by
Frank Cuthbert

A taste of the great music.
Click here for a
couple of songs
We've Got Great Kissers In New York
Optimistic You
Saturday and Sunday,
May 27 & 28
Performathon
Come show your stuff
ChipandGus
Fat Knight Theatre’s Award-Winning “ChipandGus” Comes to Catskill May 5 - 7
While the electric
give-and-take of energy between actors on stage is
often referred to as ‘ping pong,’ a new play is
taking the idea quite literally. A ping pong table
and fast-paced matches are prominently featured in “ChipandGus”,
a 90-minute “comedy with balls” by actor-writers
John Ahlin and Christopher Patrick Mullen, getting a
three-performance run May 5-7 at Catskill’s Bridge
Street Theatre.
In this Fat Knight Theatre
production, two oddball buddies meet in the back
room of a rundown sports bar in Schenectady, NY for
their weekly game. But what happens between volleys
on this particular funny, sad, surprising night will
change their relationship forever. Conceived over a
ping pong table and written and rehearsed in
basements, attics and garages, this fast, furious,
smart comedy was the winner of the Overall
Excellence Award for Ensemble in the 2016 NYCFringe
Festival, was selected for an extended run in the
Fringe Encore Series at Soho Playhouse in NYC, and
has been seen in developmental presentations in a
variety of spaces, including a black box in New
Jersey, a bar in Baltimore, a garage in
Pennsylvania, Parkside Lounge in Manhattan, and
Proctor’s Theater in Schenectady.
“I
remember the exact moment the idea came into my head
– and it was at a ping pong table,” says John Ahlin.
“I was playing ping pong for fun a few years ago,
blowing the rust off my atrophied skills, when
somehow, like a young me, I laced a screaming
backhand down the edge and in an overly theatrical
way I turned to an imaginary crowd and drank in
imaginary cheers. And then I stopped, mid
faux-celebration and thought, ‘Standing here, at the
end of a ping pong table feels very theatrical …. I
wonder if this game would work on stage?’ And with
that one idle thought, Ahab-like, I began chasing
this leviathan of an idea.”
Bios:
Christopher Patrick Mullen (Co-writer/Performer)
is a graduate of DeSales University and a member of
the company of resident artists comprising People’s
Light. Credits include: “West Side Story” (1st
National Tour); “The Runner Stumbles” (Off-Broadway
revival); “The Whaleship Essex” (Vineyard
Playhouse); “When You Comin Back, Red Ryder?” (Retro
Productions); “Metamorphoses”, “A Little Night
Music”, “Candide”, “Assassins”, “Macbeth”, and “The
Stinky Cheeseman” (Arden Theatre Co); 26 productions
with The Pennsylvania Shakespeare Festival including
“Pericles”, “Henry VIII”, “Dracula: The Journal of
Jonathan Harker”, “Charley’s Aunt”, “Hamlet”, “The
Glass Menagerie”, “Twelfth Night”, “As You Like It”,
and “Macbeth”; “Amadeus” (Hedgerow Theatre); “The
Pavilion” (Chester Theatre Co); “The Compleat Wrks
of Wllm Shkspr (abridged)”, “A Midsummer Night’s
Dream”, “Hamlet”, “The Taming of the Shrew” (Orlando
Shakespeare Theatre). His ongoing relationship with
People’s Light began in 1989. People’s Light credits
include: “The Winter’s Tale”, “Mr Hart & Mr Brown”,
“The Emperor’s New Clothes”, “Gossamer”, “King
Lear”, “Twelfth Night”, “Splittin the Raft”, “The
Crucible”, “The Miser”, “Sleeping Beauty”, “Julius
Caesar”, “The Tempest”, and “Wind In The Willows”.
Guest appearances on “Law and Order”.
John Ahlin
(Co-writer/Performer) acting credits
on Broadway include; “Waiting for Godot”, “Journey’s
End” (2007 Tony Award Best Revival), “The Lieutenant
of Inishmore”, “Voices in the Dark”, “One Mo’ Time”,
“Whoopee!” and “Macbeth”. Off-Broadway John
portrayed Orson Welles in “Orson’s Shadow” at The
Barrow Street Theatre. Regional credits: The
Shakespeare Theatre in DC, The Guthrie, The Kennedy
Center, La Jolla Playhouse, Center Stage, St. Louis
Rep, Cincinnati Playhouse, Pittsburgh Public
Theater, Actors Theatre of Louisville, Old Globe
Theatre, Goodman Theatre, Studio Arena, McCarter
Theatre, Syracuse Stage, George Street Playhouse,
and Goodspeed. TV credits include “Law and Order:
SVU”, “Late Night with David Letterman”, “Third
Watch”, “The Education of Max Bickford”, and the
Coen Brothers’ movie “Inside Llewyn Davis”. As a
playwright, John has had his award-winning play
“Gray Area” receive highly acclaimed productions in
Los Angeles, Atlanta and Off-Broadway. And 3
new plays are in the docket: “My Witch: The Margaret
Hamilton Stories”, “Howe and Hummel”, and “Mama
Sapiens”, about the mother of us all.
Get advance tickets HERE or by calling 800-838-3006
WHAT YOU DON’T KNOW ABOUT WOMEN
Another stellar evening
of cabaret entertainment comes to Catskill’s
intimate Bridge Street Theatre on Saturday May 13th,
when singer/actress Lynn Kearney and former Fosse
dancer Sonja Stuart team up with musical director
Dan Furman for a night of stories and songs
dedicated to wising up the rest of us on just how
much we still need to learn about the female sex.
“I’ve always loved that sassy song ‘What You
Don’t Know About Women’ from the musical ‘City of
Angels’,” Kearney says, “and when Sonja and I
decided to do a show together, we wanted to make it
an evening of comedy, songs, and patter aiming to
explore that theme and the mystery of just what it
is that women actually want. We’ve discovered some
really funny and touching duets, along with a few
solo numbers. And while it’s been difficult to find
songs that reflect true friendship between women, I
think that’s been our ultimate goal.”
Lynn
Kearney got her first big break replacing Sandy
Faison as Grace Farrell in the original Broadway
production of “Annie”. With her long-time friend and
director Rosemary Quinn, she created the play
“Ladies Lounge” which had a successful run at
Off-Broadway’s legendary La MaMa. On television,
Lynn appeared on daytime’s “All My Children” and
“The Edge of Night”. She began her cabaret career
working at Jan Wallman’s restaurant and then for
Sidney Myer at Panache Encore and then Don’t Tell
Mama, where she still appears regularly. Sonja
Stuart has appeared on Broadway in "Pippin", "My
Fair Lady" and "No, No, Nanette" as well as in
regional productions of "Lies and Legends", "Irma La
Douce", "Company" and "Man of La Mancha". Her film
credits include "All That Jazz", and "Annie", and
she was nominated for Best Supporting Actress at the
London International Film Festival for her work in
the indy film "Blue Collar Boys".
Bios:
Lynn Kearney
began her professional career touring with the
Chicago Free Street Theater. In New York, she
appeared in “Escape to Freedom”, “Finian’s Rainbow”,
and the original cast of the musical “Christy”,
before getting her big break – replacing Sandy
Faison as Grace Farrell in the original Broadway
production of “Annie”.
Lynn
and her long-time friend and director Rosemary Quinn
also created the play “Ladies Lounge” which had a
successful run at Off-Broadway’s legendary La MaMa.
On television, Lynn appeared on “All My Children”
and “The Edge of Night”. She began her cabaret
career working at Jan Wallman’s restaurant and then
for Sidney Myer at Panache Encore and then Don’t
Tell Mama, where she still appears regularly.
Lynn is a graduate of
New York University Tisch School of the Arts and
received a Pastry degree from the Culinary Institute
of America. She has studied acting with Olympia
Dukakis, Alice Spivak and Lloyd Richards, and
continues to study singing and acting with Eric
Michael Gillett. Lynn currently resides in Catskill,
New York.
Sonja Stuart
has appeared on
Broadway in "Pippin", "My Fair Lady" and "No, No,
Nanette" as well as in regional productions of "Lies
and Legends", "Irma La Douce", "Company" and "Man of
La Mancha". Her film credits include "All That
Jazz", and "Annie", and she was nominated for Best
Supporting Actress at the London International Film
Festival for her work in the indy film "Blue Collar
Boys".
She’s
thrilled to be appearing in "What You Don't Know
About Women", both in Catskill and, later in May, at
the legendary Don’t Tell Mama in Greenwich Village.
Dan Furman
(Musical
Director)
hails from Old Hickory, Tennessee (just outside of
Nashville).
He began playing piano and composing music at
an early age and went on to study composition and
jazz piano at Oberlin Conservatory. After moving to
New York in 2003 to play jazz, Dan began writing for
music theater as well.
He spent 4 years in the BMI Lehman Engels
Musical Theater Workshop and his musical, “RIP!”
(now called “Impossible But True”), was featured in
the 2011 Midtown International Theatre Festival.
Dan wrote the theme song for the Big Apple
Circus 2010-11 show, “Dance On!” His collaboration
with bookwriter Anita Gonzalez, “Ybor City”, was
given a staged reading at the Lee Strasberg
Institute in Manhattan in the summer of 2015, and
later a studio production at the University of
Michigan in early 2017.
Dan is currently writing book, music and
lyrics for “The Proust Virus”, a musical about video
game characters who come to life.
He lives in Brooklyn and appears frequently
as a jazz pianist at the off-off-Broadway show
“Sleep No More”, as well as with the Dan Furman
Trio.
Advance tickets HERE or by calling 800-838-3006
Coney Island
Frank Cuthbert’s New
Musical “Coney Island” Comes to Catskill
It’s
the summer of 1946 and Frankie’s back from serving
in the Pacific with big dreams of takin’ New York
City by storm! Hop aboard the F Train for this
grand, old-school, Broadway-style musical comedy
being presented for one performance only in a
concert reading at Catskill’s Bridge Street Theatre
on Sunday May 21 at 2:00pm.
Almost a decade
in development, Catskill resident Frank Cuthbert’s
swingin’ and affectionate tribute to WWII-era NYC is
bursting at the seams with all the charm, grit, and
promise of Gotham in the postwar years. Amidst the
colorful backdrop of the iconic Cyclone roller
coaster and Wonder Wheel, the story follows Frankie,
a war hero, who has returned to his old neighborhood
with dreams of making it as a crooner. Frankie
struggles with recurring nightmares of war, his
parents’ skepticism about his dreams, and a
dangerous rivalry with a mob-connected club owner,
who threatens his singing career and is in hot
pursuit of his girlfriend Patsy, an aspiring
Broadway dancer. Burlesque queens, freaks, hustlers,
kooch dancers, entrepreneurs, grifters, small-time
(and big-time) hoods – all play a part in the
nostalgic tapestry of another time and place that
the musical depicts.
“Coney Island” paints an
image embedded in our nations' psyche – a once
uninhabited sliver of sand nine miles from
Manhattan, transformed into a legend by ambition and
imagination. For most of the twentieth century,
Coney Island was a land of rides and exotic
curiosities, where ordinary people encountered the
extraordinary. Part carnival, part seaside resort,
Coney Island was a refuge where people forgot about
work and duty and escaped to a world of fantasy and
joy. On hot summer days, a million people fled the
heat of the city to frolic in the surf and stroll
along the Boardwalk. Young and old, rich and poor
shared laughter and sunshine by the shore. Cares
washed away like footprints in the sand. Everyone
entered with a smile and left with a memory. Just a
ten-cent ride on the F train. Last stop Coney
Island, the greatest amusement park in the world!
Performathon
BRIDGE STREET THEATRE PRESENTS A
PERFORMATHON FUNDRAISER
ON MEMORIAL DAY WEEKEND
Do you (or anyone you know) have a talent
you want to share with the world? This Memorial Day
weekend, Catskill’s Bridge Street Theatre will give
you a chance to strut your stuff, whatever it may
be, when they present a Performathon Fundraiser in
their beautiful new Mainstage auditorium. Want to
haul out that old accordion or maybe see your child
perform her magic act on the stage of a professional
theatre? Or perhaps you’ll hear your neighbor play
ukulele, sponsor your plumber to come and tap dance,
or enjoy your friend from work reciting his
Shakespeare sonnet or performing that song from Les
Mis. Now’s your chance! The organization’s
first-ever Performathon is the culminating event of
the theatre’s push to raise $35,000 for its Capital
Campaign. All proceeds go toward the Campaign and
all donations are tax deductible.
As part of the event, Bridge Street Theatre will
also be attempting to break the GUINNESS WORLD
RECORDS title TM for Most signatures on a piece of
theatre memorabilia. They’ll begin collecting
signatures on a big golden cupola (which was removed
from the theatre’s roof during its recent
renovation) in early May, and the attempt to reach a
goal of 700 signatures will culminate at the
Memorial Day weekend event. On both days of the
event, $1.00 snacks will be available including hot
dogs, cupcakes, and more. There will also be raffles
and a 50/50, all of it in a family-friendly, county
fair atmosphere. Bridge Street Theatre invites
EVERYBODY to perform or just to come and enjoy all
the incredible talent in our local community.
The fee to perform is $1.00
for 1 minute, with a minimum time slot of 5 minutes.
You may perform for up to 30 minutes (for $30.00).
All types of performance are welcome and creativity
is encouraged. Performance slots are available for
Saturday, May 27 from 9:00am through 5:30 pm and
Sunday, May 28 from 9:00am through 9:55pm with a few
breaks on both days for guest performances by
professional acts and for set-up and break down of
the stage. There will be a “Battle of the Bands” on
Saturday night from 6:00pm to 10:00pm, so tell your
kids that this is the time to bring their rock band
over to do a set or your own band can come and
perform—bands of all ages welcome. To sign up as a
performer, contact Alison Davy at
alison@bridgest.org or
518-943-3894. Your slot will not be considered
confirmed unless you speak directly with Alison
Davy—if you leave a voicemail, it does do not count
as a confirmed sign up.